New constraints on the evolution of the stellar-to-dark matter connection: a combined analysis of galaxy-galaxy lensing, clustering, and stellar mass functions from z=0.2 to z=1
Alexie Leauthaud, Jeremy Tinker, Kevin Bundy, Peter S. Behroozi,, Richard Massey, Jason Rhodes, Matthew R. George, Jean-Paul Kneib, Andrew, Benson, Risa H. Wechsler, Michael T. Busha, Peter Capak, Marina Cortes,, Olivier Ilbert, Anton M. Koekemoer, Oliver Le Fevre, Simon Lilly

TL;DR
This study combines galaxy-galaxy lensing, clustering, and stellar mass functions from z=0.2 to 1 to constrain the evolution of the stellar-to-halo mass relation, revealing key insights into galaxy formation efficiency and quenching mechanisms.
Contribution
It presents the first joint analysis of these observables using a novel framework, providing new constraints on the shape and evolution of the SHMR and the concept of mass downsizing.
Findings
Halo mass scales as M*^0.46 at low stellar mass with little redshift evolution.
The minimum dark-to-stellar mass ratio is about 27 at M*=4.5x10^10 Msun.
Detection of mass downsizing trends in pivot masses and ratios.
Abstract
Using data from the COSMOS survey, we perform the first joint analysis of galaxy-galaxy weak lensing, galaxy spatial clustering, and galaxy number densities. Carefully accounting for sample variance and for scatter between stellar and halo mass, we model all three observables simultaneously using a novel and self-consistent theoretical framework. Our results provide strong constraints on the shape and redshift evolution of the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) from z=0.2 to z=1. At low stellar mass, we find that halo mass scales as Mh M*^0.46 and that this scaling does not evolve significantly with redshift to z=1. We show that the dark-to-stellar ratio, Mh/M*, varies from low to high masses, reaching a minimum of Mh/M*~27 at M*=4.5x10^10 Msun and Mh=1.2x10^12 Msun. This minimum is important for models of galaxy formation because it marks the mass at which the accumulated stellar…
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